More than 120 indie and foreign titles will bow in Park City, Utah, beginning Jan. 19.

In her first starring role since her arrest for shoplifting, Winona Ryder plays an insurance investigator looking into a competition for “those who accidentally kill themselves in really stupid ways” in Finn Taylor’s comedy “The Darwin Awards.”

In Paul McGuigan’s “Lucky Number Slevin,” Josh Hartnett is a man inadvertently involved in a murder plotted by one of New York City’s biggest crime bosses (played by Ben Kingsley).

Other high-profile premieres:

* “Art School Confidential,” a Terry Zwigoff comedy with John Malkovich, Angelica Huston and Jim Broadbent.

* “A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints,” starring Robert Downey Jr. in Dito Montiel’s autobiographical drama set in Astoria, Queens, in the early 1980s.

* Jonathan Drayton’s “Little Miss Sunshine,” a comedy about a family determined to get their young daughter into a beauty pageant, with Steve Carell, Toni Collette and Greg Kinnear.

* “The Sleep of Science,” the latest from Michel Gondry (“Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind”), stars Gael Garcia Bernal as a man held captive in his dreams – who tries to wake up.

* “This Film Is Not Rated,” a documentary exposé of the film-rating system.

The closing-night film on Jan. 27 is Nick Cassavettes’ “Alpha Dog,” starring Emile Hirsch as a suburban drug dealer who made the FBI’s most wanted list. Bruce Willis, Sharon Stone and Justin Timberlake co-star.